Gems & Gemology - Jan. 1934 - Fall 2017 - 339 issues, 18,279 pages, 83 years of Gemology
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Gems & Gemology - Jan. 1934 - Fall 2017 - 339 issues, 18,279 pages, 83 years of Gemology
- Topics
- Joseph, Gill, Joseph O. Gill, Joseph O Gill, Precious, Stones, Jewelry, Gems, gemology, gemology, jewelry, diamond, jewels, Gill's, Historical, emerald, ruby, diamond: sapphire, amber, jade, ivory, bone, lapis, opal, pearl, shell, topaz, tourmaline, turquoise
- Collection
- opensource
- Language
- English
GEMS & GEMOLOGY - January 1934 through Fall 2017 - All 339 issues of G&G â 18,279 pages or 83 years of Gemology for easy access - Containing ALL G&Gs that are published up to the time of this posting at Archive.com - Joseph O. Gill collected 1 by 1 and made into a single searchable PDF, just CLICK - CTRL+F and type in ANYTHING: personâs name, famous gem, locality, title keyword, year, etc.. You can start your search at any point in the text, which runs chronologically, that you wish. (Download this overnight) Put your copy of this document directly onto your desktop of your laptop, computer or even your cell phone for easy instant access. Remember to keep a backup copy on your inexpensive passport size external hard drive just in case your computer dies; no need to use old technology like DVDs. -----Over 2500 people downloaded the last issue of this document "GEMS & GEMOLOGY â Posted in 2015 and each downloaded document was shared with more than 3 people------------Please forward this to other interested peoples, Thank you Joseph Gill
PLEASE tell others about this unique resource.............. Gems & Gemology is published by the Gemological Institute of America, GIA - I invite the GIA to post this large PDF, 1.14 GBs, on their own web site & with credit to myself for this idea. The GIA is to be congratulated on its progressive attitude, for making Gems & Gemology 1934 through 2017 available for free download on their GIA web site.
Duncan Pay (dpay@gia.edu ) as of Spring 2013 was made Editor-in-Chief of Gems & Gemology. Duncan can be held responsible for this brilliant and long overdue idea of releasing ALL issues of the G&G, 83 years worth, into the Public Domain via a FREE download archive on the GIA's official web site. http://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology.
Richard T. Liddicoat, President of GIA for over 30 years and a close friend of mine for 30 years, was known for his revolutionary ideas which propelled the GIA into the World position as the premier source for gemology. Richard Liddicoat approached myself in 1975 with an invitation that the GIA would be happy to publish my "Gill's Index" released in 1978 (See Gems & Gemology Fall 1980 pages 366 - 369 & Edward J. Gubelin's Review 368 - 369 - FREE Download at http://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology ). This was the very first book ever published by the GIA that was written by someone outside their own staff. I called Richard at his home only 2 or 3 weeks before he died and we talked at length about using "Gill's Index to Journals, Articles And Books Relating to Gems And Jewelry" that included all books from 1652 and all gemological journals in English worldwide through 1978 (to be continually updated) as a online central index on the GIA website. I talked about this project with Bill Boyajian who was president at the GIA at that time and he was enthusiastic about doing it. Bill Boyajian referred the idea to the GIA library. Nothing was done. I suggest that Mr. Duncan would be perfect to make this wonderful resource available to all who want to know. This central index could be manages by a group of interested experts and all the entries could be hot linked to the related articles or books that wanted to be part of this innovative project. Releasing the G&G journals would seem to be the first important step in making the massive data base available to all the public and those in the jewelry industry. Richand T. Liddicoat would be very proud.....................
GO TOO: https://archive.org/search.php?query=joseph%20O.%20Gill to see the many other interesting text that I have contributed to this wonderful web site.
****NOTE: Recently the GIA library has been wisely and generously posting over 400 of their rare books online at: https://archive.org/search.php?query=collection%3Agialibrary&sort=-publicdate
Thank you GIA............
----------------------------------------------------------------------
All 339 separate issues of G&G as PDF files can be downloaded, one by one, are at:
This author has downloaded each of the 339 separate PDF files 1 by 1 and has combined them into a single, fully searchable (Ctrl + F ), PDF document, Gems & Gemology 1934 through Fall 2017, 1.14 GBs. (download this overnight),
Gems & Gemology - HISTORY - was started as a bi-monthly periodical published by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) for American Gem Society (A.G.S.) members from January 1934 through November-December 1934.
From January-February 1935 through Winter 1937, the A.G.S. published the journal for its members. Gems & Gemology became a quarterly journal as of Spring 1936, and has remained as such through the present. The GIA again in the spring of 1938 became the publisher of the journal for the A.G.S. and its members. Starting with the Summer 1943, issue the GIA published the journal as the official organ of the G.I.A and this is still true today.
As of the Summer 1947 issue the journal showed a large improvement because a new five-man editorial board was formed to oversee each article. The board positions were filled by the most eminent people in the subject of gemology and were changed periodically up to the present date.
Starting with the Winter 1958 issue there were two reports presented in each issue, one from the Gem Trade Lab of the GIA in Los Angeles, and the other from the Gem Trade Lab in New York City. Note change in scope and size with the April 1981 issue.
Gems & Gemology has always directed most of its emphasis toward scientific gemology, with somewhat less interest in locations of gems. This has been corrected in the last 20 years
Gemological Institute of America, GIA home web site is at: http://www.gia.edu/
Spring 1981 onward has a more modern, professional look and is much larger in size and number of page as well as color illustrated.
There are 8 separate indexes to the Gems & Gemology, of which 3 are by Subject and 3 are by Author for the years 1934-1980 & 2 additional indexes made in PDF format called: 1981- 2012 AUTHOR INDEX & 1981- 2012 SUBJECT INDEX), all at: http://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology. These eight different indexes were prepared for one single journal by a library âscientistâ. With all the abbreviations and a limit of 2 to 4 words per entry, seemingly to save space, these indexes lack necessary annotations that would make a practicing gemologistâs job fast and easy. With this large single PDF there is NO NEED for any index because anything can be easily search for.
ALSO GO TOO: https://archive.org/search.php?query=joseph%20O.%20Gill to see the many other interesting text that I have contributed to this wonderful web site.
PLEASE tell others about this unique resource.............. Gems & Gemology is published by the Gemological Institute of America, GIA - I invite the GIA to post this large PDF, 1.14 GBs, on their own web site & with credit to myself for this idea. The GIA is to be congratulated on its progressive attitude, for making Gems & Gemology 1934 through 2017 available for free download on their GIA web site.
Duncan Pay (dpay@gia.edu ) as of Spring 2013 was made Editor-in-Chief of Gems & Gemology. Duncan can be held responsible for this brilliant and long overdue idea of releasing ALL issues of the G&G, 83 years worth, into the Public Domain via a FREE download archive on the GIA's official web site. http://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology.
Richard T. Liddicoat, President of GIA for over 30 years and a close friend of mine for 30 years, was known for his revolutionary ideas which propelled the GIA into the World position as the premier source for gemology. Richard Liddicoat approached myself in 1975 with an invitation that the GIA would be happy to publish my "Gill's Index" released in 1978 (See Gems & Gemology Fall 1980 pages 366 - 369 & Edward J. Gubelin's Review 368 - 369 - FREE Download at http://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology ). This was the very first book ever published by the GIA that was written by someone outside their own staff. I called Richard at his home only 2 or 3 weeks before he died and we talked at length about using "Gill's Index to Journals, Articles And Books Relating to Gems And Jewelry" that included all books from 1652 and all gemological journals in English worldwide through 1978 (to be continually updated) as a online central index on the GIA website. I talked about this project with Bill Boyajian who was president at the GIA at that time and he was enthusiastic about doing it. Bill Boyajian referred the idea to the GIA library. Nothing was done. I suggest that Mr. Duncan would be perfect to make this wonderful resource available to all who want to know. This central index could be manages by a group of interested experts and all the entries could be hot linked to the related articles or books that wanted to be part of this innovative project. Releasing the G&G journals would seem to be the first important step in making the massive data base available to all the public and those in the jewelry industry. Richand T. Liddicoat would be very proud.....................
GO TOO: https://archive.org/search.php?query=joseph%20O.%20Gill to see the many other interesting text that I have contributed to this wonderful web site.
****NOTE: Recently the GIA library has been wisely and generously posting over 400 of their rare books online at: https://archive.org/search.php?query=collection%3Agialibrary&sort=-publicdate
Thank you GIA............
----------------------------------------------------------------------
All 339 separate issues of G&G as PDF files can be downloaded, one by one, are at:
This author has downloaded each of the 339 separate PDF files 1 by 1 and has combined them into a single, fully searchable (Ctrl + F ), PDF document, Gems & Gemology 1934 through Fall 2017, 1.14 GBs. (download this overnight),
Gems & Gemology - HISTORY - was started as a bi-monthly periodical published by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) for American Gem Society (A.G.S.) members from January 1934 through November-December 1934.
From January-February 1935 through Winter 1937, the A.G.S. published the journal for its members. Gems & Gemology became a quarterly journal as of Spring 1936, and has remained as such through the present. The GIA again in the spring of 1938 became the publisher of the journal for the A.G.S. and its members. Starting with the Summer 1943, issue the GIA published the journal as the official organ of the G.I.A and this is still true today.
As of the Summer 1947 issue the journal showed a large improvement because a new five-man editorial board was formed to oversee each article. The board positions were filled by the most eminent people in the subject of gemology and were changed periodically up to the present date.
Starting with the Winter 1958 issue there were two reports presented in each issue, one from the Gem Trade Lab of the GIA in Los Angeles, and the other from the Gem Trade Lab in New York City. Note change in scope and size with the April 1981 issue.
Gems & Gemology has always directed most of its emphasis toward scientific gemology, with somewhat less interest in locations of gems. This has been corrected in the last 20 years
Gemological Institute of America, GIA home web site is at: http://www.gia.edu/
Spring 1981 onward has a more modern, professional look and is much larger in size and number of page as well as color illustrated.
There are 8 separate indexes to the Gems & Gemology, of which 3 are by Subject and 3 are by Author for the years 1934-1980 & 2 additional indexes made in PDF format called: 1981- 2012 AUTHOR INDEX & 1981- 2012 SUBJECT INDEX), all at: http://www.gia.edu/gems-gemology. These eight different indexes were prepared for one single journal by a library âscientistâ. With all the abbreviations and a limit of 2 to 4 words per entry, seemingly to save space, these indexes lack necessary annotations that would make a practicing gemologistâs job fast and easy. With this large single PDF there is NO NEED for any index because anything can be easily search for.
ALSO GO TOO: https://archive.org/search.php?query=joseph%20O.%20Gill to see the many other interesting text that I have contributed to this wonderful web site.
AND SEE:
JOURNAL OF GEMMOLOGY Jan 1947 No. 4 2016 257 Issues, 18, 025 Pages, 69 Years Of Gemmology
https://archive.org/details/JOUNALOFGEMMOLOGYJan1947No.42016257Issues18025Pages69YearsOfGemmology
From October 1931 through December 1946, the Gemological Association of
Great Britain had used several outside publications as their official
journal; but with their incorporation and independence from the National
Association of Goldsmiths, they began publication of their own journal
in 1947, entitled it The Journal of Gemology.
Joseph O. Gill collected The Journal of Gemology 1 by 1 and made them
into a single searchable PDF, just CLICK - CTRL+F and type in ANYTHING:
personal name, famous gems, locality, title keyword, year, etc.. You can
start your search at any point in the text that you wish, which runs
chronologically. (Download this overnight) Put your copy of this
document directly onto your desktop of your laptop, computer or even
your cell phone for easy instant access. Remember to keep a backup copy
on your inexpensive passport size external hard drive or memory stick
just in case your computer dies. Please forward this to other
interested peoples
Great Britain had used several outside publications as their official
journal; but with their incorporation and independence from the National
Association of Goldsmiths, they began publication of their own journal
in 1947, entitled it The Journal of Gemology.
Joseph O. Gill collected The Journal of Gemology 1 by 1 and made them
into a single searchable PDF, just CLICK - CTRL+F and type in ANYTHING:
personal name, famous gems, locality, title keyword, year, etc.. You can
start your search at any point in the text that you wish, which runs
chronologically. (Download this overnight) Put your copy of this
document directly onto your desktop of your laptop, computer or even
your cell phone for easy instant access. Remember to keep a backup copy
on your inexpensive passport size external hard drive or memory stick
just in case your computer dies. Please forward this to other
interested peoples
===================================================
- Addeddate
- 2017-11-23 12:36:57
- Identifier
- GemsGemology-Jan.1934-Fall2017-339Issues18279Pages83YearsOf
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t0200jk0n
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